• Monday, Nov. 26, 2018
Mick Jagger on new Stones tour, Aretha, acting and Grammys
In this Nov. 14, 2016 file photo, Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones poses for a portrait in New York. The Rolling Stones frontman, who will tour America next spring with his iconic band, says live shows give him a rush that can’t be matched and is the reason that at 75, he still loves touring. (Photo by Victoria Will/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

Mick Jagger likes a buzz. A natural buzz.

The Rolling Stones frontman, who will tour America next spring with his iconic band, says live shows give him a rush that can't be matched and is the reason that at 75, he still loves touring.

"When you go out in front of all those people you get an enormous rush of chemicals in your body — your own chemicals, not chemicals you've put in," he said laughing.

"Let's face it, it is a huge buzz. Must be like playing football or something," he said.

Jagger should feel like a football player — since he'll be playing the same stadiums as NFL stars when the Stones' No Filter tour launches in Miami on April 20, 2019.

Tickets go on sale Friday and the 13 shows will hit Florida, Texas, Arizona, California, Washington, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Illinois and Washington, D.C.

"Basically your life's attuned to doing those few hours onstage and everything else is a build up to that. Of course, you get to enjoy yourself at other times, but really you're thinking about the next show or the show you're doing that night," said Jagger, who will be joined onstage with Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts. "A lot of prep time goes into that — keeping yourself (together) so you can get through the whole thing without screwing up physically and mentally and keeping yourself really sharp. But I really enjoy it."

In an interview Monday with The Associated Press, Jagger talked about the tour, only having three Grammys and appearing in the new-but-old Aretha Franklin concert documentary, "Amazing Grace," filmed at a Los Angeles church in 1972.

Q: What can fans expect from the U.S. shows?

Jagger: A good night out! A good night out for all. We did a kind of similar tour in Europe this summer, so it's got a lot of fun. ...It's pretty high energy and it's a good a show, I think. I'm into it.

Q: Is it different performing in the U.S. compared to other territories?

Jagger: Well, I don't have to speak foreign languages normally, so that's a big difference. When you tour Europe it's a lot of languages, so I try to do them all and that takes up some time, so (in the U.S.) I can concentrate on some other things. There's lots of regional differences, say between Houston and New York, so you've got to tune yourself to that a little bit. It's slightly about adjusting your set and attitude. Its different. It's nice that it's different, you don't want it to be completely homogenous. But it's great to be going around so many different areas, different states and so on.

Q: How's the new music you're writing coming along?

Jagger: It's going good. I've got lots of stuff. I'm doing some more writing this week. And I'm always, like, messing around. I enjoy the writing process a lot. I mean, you always think the last thing you wrote is really wonderful and sometimes they're really not (laughs). But it's really fun doing it and it's really enjoyable doing new things.

Q: You don't even need to release music because of the band's catalog...

Jagger: Yeah, and we haven't released that much and I think it's a shame we haven't released more new music. So, I would hope we're going to release some music. We do have a huge catalog. The thing about the catalog is when we come up to doing a tour like this, I try and go back and find some stuff that we haven't done ever or we haven't done very much and try to mix it in, so it isn't always the same show. But when you're playing a really big show, there's a certain amount of songs people want to hear — you don't have to play them — but there's a certain percentage of the songs that people will want to hear and if you don't do them, they'll go, "Wish he'd done that one."

Q: Were you happy with the success of the band's blues album, which won a Grammy this year?

Jagger: That was good. We weren't really setting out to do that. It just happened. It was a fun thing to do. It was ... stuff we'd known for years since we were kids and played in like clubs and we knew it all pretty well. I really thought it was great and the response was really surprising, and I thought that was really wonderful. And I just hope we're going to come up with some new stuff as well.

Q: I'm surprised the Stones only have three Grammys, when other acts have 10 or 20. Does that bother you?

Jagger: No, I don't really care about Grammys very much. I'm not saying it's not not nice to have, it's lovely to have. But it's not going to break my heart if I don't get Grammys and if my Grammys count is not as big as other peoples. But it's very nice to get a Grammy. I appreciate it.

Q: I saw you in the new Aretha documentary...

Jagger: I didn't even see it yet! ...It was like an amazing event. It was so delayed and long and I don't think Aretha wanted it to come out for whatever reasons and there were so many technical problems with the sound, but I'm glad it's out and I can't wait to see it. ...It was quite a lot of preaching. Did they leave the preaching in?

Q: They did.

Jagger: I remember that very well.

Q: What else do you remember about that day?

Jagger: I remember it really well. It was just a wonderful event. It was quite mesmerizing from start to finish really. I think I went with Charlie (Watts) and I think Billy Preston quite possibly, but I don't know if you see him there. It was really an amazing, really fantastic day in church really, which I haven't had for a while.

Q: What do you remember about working with filmmaker Nicolas Roeg, who died a couple days ago and directed you in 1970's "Performance"?

Jagger: He was a wonderful filmmaker and I only worked with him that one time, and he was co-directing. And he's a wonderful cinematographer and did some great movies, and he was very quirky and all his films were very different, one to the other. He did some great work and he had a long life and I'm sad he passed away, but I always remember working with him; a wonderful guy to work with.

Q: I know you've produced a lot lately, from TV shows to documentaries, but do you want to do more acting?

Jagger: I just actually finished doing a cameo part in a movie which is kind of a twisted thriller, which is called "The Burnt Orange Heresy." I just finished doing that in Italy. I did a couple weeks on that, so it'll be out next year. It was only a small part, but fun to do.

  • Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2018
Ludwig Goransson is having the best year ever. Period.
In this Nov. 15, 2018 photo, Swedish composer Ludwig Goransson poses for a portrait in New York. At just 34, Goransson is having the best year of his career. He completed the film score for the uber-successful “Black Panther,” and earned three nominations at this year’s Grammy Awards. He also composed music for the film “Venom,” released last month, and returned to the “Creed” franchise to do its film score. (Photo by Christopher Smith/Invision/AP)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

He's had his hand in two of the year's biggest pop culture moments — with the film "Black Panther" and the song "This Is America" — but unlike Michael B. Jordan or Childish Gambino, Ludwig Goransson can easily walk down the street like a regular dude.

At just 34, the talented and skilled composer from Sweden is having the best year of his career. He completed the film score for the uber-successful "Black Panther," even traveling to Senegal for three weeks to learn about African music and work with local musicians.

He earned three nominations at this year's Grammy Awards for his production and songwriting work on Gambino's 2016 album, "Awaken, My Love!," and the duo reached even greater heights with the epic "This Is America" — and its heralded video — which went viral and became an instant No. 1 smash in May. Goransson also composed music for "Venom," released last month, and returned to the "Creed" franchise to do its film score ("Creed II" hits U.S. theaters on Wednesday).

"It definitely feels like I'm living a dream. But I try not to pinch myself because I don't want to wake up," the long-haired, easygoing musician said, sitting comfortably on a couch at a hotel in New York City.

Oh, and he's even worked with Beyonce and Jay-Z.

"I worked on a little trailer for the tour," said Goransson, who is signed to Jay-Z's Roc Nation. "It was just a short little thing but still it was Beyonce and Jay-Z. It doesn't get bigger than that."

Goransson is clearly booked, and busy. He worked for months on "Creed II," starring Jordan, Sylvester Stallone and Tessa Thompson, saying the franchise "is so close to my heart" because the 2015 film was one of the first studio features he composed music for.

Goransson moved to America to study at the University of Southern California over a decade ago, where he met Ryan Coogler and composed music for the director's student film. When Coogler directed the critically-acclaimed independent, "Fruitvale Station," he called on Goransson. "Creed" and "Black Panther" soon followed.

"What's really great is that it was a very natural progress for us. Every time we worked together it was always like stepping stones together," Goransson said of his relationship with Coogler, who didn't direct "Creed II" but is credited as an executive producer. "We're developing and we're getting to know each other more for every project."

Goransson, who now lives in Los Angeles, grew up in Linkoping, a small town two hours south of Stockholm. He started playing guitar at 7 — his father is a guitar teacher — and when he was 9 he fell in love with Metallica.

"That's when I was like, 'OK, I want to spend 10 hours a day practicing guitar for the rest of my life,'" he said. "I wanted to be the best guitar player in the world. And then my dad got me a portable recorder, so I started writing my own music."

He got a job assisting composer Theodore Shapiro — first working on the 2008 comedy "Tropic Thunder" — after graduating from USC.

"From the very first submission of materials that he sent to me in applying for the job, it was immediately clear that he had his own voice as a composer, and that's really rare," said Shapiro, who has also scored "The Wolf of Wall Street, "The Devil Wears Prada," ''Blades of Glory" and more.

"You can find a lot of people who are very proficient at doing other styles, but it's very rare that you find somebody who really arrives with a very unique sensibility and that it's always been clear that he had that. He just thinks a little bit differently than everyone else."

Shapiro's busy schedule wouldn't allow him to compose music for a then-new TV series called "Community," which debuted in 2009. So he recommended Goransson.

"They gave me a chance," Goransson said.

It was where he met Gambino, then mainly known as Donald Glover. Working on a song together for the show led to Goransson and Glover trading ideas about for Gambino's 2010 mixtape, "Culdesac." They have worked tightly ever sense.

"It's a similar journey that I did with Ryan (Coogler). We started on a mixtape, then we started on a smaller project. What's really fun, working with Donald, is he's such a Renaissance man. You never know where he's going to go, what he's going to do. Every project is musically very different from each other, but I still feel like their emotionally very connected," said Goransson, who has also produced for Chance the Rapper and HAIM.

"I think we just keep pushing each other and I keep learning, keep challenging myself. It keeps getting better and better."

Alongside Gambino, Goransson earned Grammy nominations for album of the year for "Awaken" and record of the year and best R&B song for the hit, "Redbone." The song won Gambino his first Grammy — best traditional R&B performance — a category only awarded to performers, not producers or songwriters.

But this awards season, Goransson is looking like a white-hot contender, from the Grammys to the Oscars, thanks to "Black Panther" and "This Is America," which he and Gambino started working on three years ago.

The work for "Black Panther" was also intense and long — and rewarding. Goransson said composing music for the top-grossing Marvel Studios project came with "extreme pressure."

"Being white and from Sweden, scoring a movie like this, there was a big pressure. Knowing Ryan, having a collaborator that you worked with over 10 years ... his trust and his confidence in me really turned the pressure into more of an inspiration," he said. "After I read the script, I knew the only way that I could score this movie was to go to Africa, do my research, learn and train with some of the greatest musicians I've ever met. It was incredible journey for me."

Shapiro said Goransson going the extra mile for "Black Panther" is "what separates that score from everything else and makes it special."

"He didn't have to do that. He could have stayed at home and done the research. But he ... really dove in to an extraordinary degree and that commitment clearly came out in the music that he wrote," he said.

Going the extra mile is common for Goransson, even on a lighter level. On this day, for a photo shoot, the composer with a fun fashion sense (he wore a forest green crushed velvet suit to the 2018 Grammys) shows up with three coat options, including a furry, brown number. He is even game to jump in the freezing snow to take photo.

Shapiro said apart from being talented, Goransson is simply a fun and kind dude.

"He has this easy confidence about him that is really magnetic, but also a real kindness to him, and that's an incredible combination. And obviously it draws people to him and makes them want to collaborate with him," Shapiro said.

  • Friday, Nov. 16, 2018
Composer Lalo Schifrin says Oscar is an "amazing honor"
In this Nov. 10, 2016 file photo, Argentina's composer Lalo Schifrin gestures as he arrives before being awarded Commandeur in the Arts and Letters order by French Culture and Communication minister Audrey Azoulay in Paris.. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- 

Lalo Schifrin's unconventional scores have a way of getting into your head and staying there. The Argentinian composer has written more than 100 arrangements for film and television, including "Dirty Harry," Bullitt," ''Cool Hand Luke," and, perhaps most famously, the theme for "Mission: Impossible."

In over 50 years of work, he's also racked up six Academy Award nominations — five for original score ("Cool Hand Luke," ''The Fox," ''Voyage of the Damned," ''The Amityville Horror," and "The Sting II") and one for original song — but has gone home empty handed every time. That'll change Sunday at the 10th annual Governors Awards where Schifrin, along with actress Cicely Tyson and publicist Marvin Levy , will be given a prestigious honorary Oscar statuette.

Schifrin called the honor "amazing" and thanked the members of the film academy for their "generosity."

Schifrin has been training in music since a very young age — his father was a respected musician locally in Buenos Aires who started him early. He piano studied with Enrique Barenboim and Juan Carlos Paz, and eventually got accepted into the prestigious Paris Conservatory, where he learned about harmony and composition from Olivier Messiaen ("He was a great influence on me.") Schifrin, who is also an accomplished jazz musician, impressed the likes of Dizzy Gillespie along the way before making his way to Los Angeles.

Lately the 86-year-old has been less focused on film scores and more on classic compositions, but Schifrin still loves films and reflected on some of his best-known works.

"Every movie has its own personality. There are no rules to write music for movies," Schifrin said. "The movie dictates what the music will be."

One prime example is "Dirty Harry," where Schifrin decided that the main character wasn't in fact Clint Eastwood's hero Harry Callahan, but the villain, Scorpio.

"You would think the composer would pay more attention to the hero. But in this case, no I did it to Scorpio, the bad guy, the evil guy," he said. "I wrote a theme for Scorpio."

But it has been the "Mission: Impossible" score, famously written in the unusual 5/4 time signature, that has continued to remain his most popular and recognizable, as the Tom Cruise film series continues introducing new generations to the urgent earworm.

"To me it was a surprise that the theme became so popular with people," Schifrin said.

A producer at the time told him that he wanted something simple, something compact, and something that people can hear from the kitchen and know exactly which show is starting.

"I went to write something simple," he said. "And over time it became so popular and I'm so happy about it."

  • Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2018
German Playboy magazine regrets misquoting Morricone in interview
Ennio Morricone answers questions during an interview in Rome, Tuesday, May 31, 2016. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
BERLIN (AP) -- 

The German edition of Playboy magazine distanced itself Tuesday from an interview in its latest edition with Ennio Morricone, in which the renowned Italian film composer appears to blast director Quentin Tarantino and the Oscars ceremony.

The interview, published last week, quoted the 90-year-old composer referring to Tarantino as a "cretin" who stole ideas from others and the Academy Awards ceremony as "boring."

Morricone, who won an Oscar in 2016 for his score for Tarantino's film "The Hateful Eight," has vehemently denied criticizing the director, his films or the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

"I consider Tarantino a great director," Morricone said, adding that he credited their collaboration for his Oscar success, "which is for sure one of the greatest acknowledgments of my career, and I am forever grateful for the opportunity to compose music for his film."

German Playboy, which is published by Munich-based Hubert Burda Media, said that "up to now, we have considered the freelancer who conducted the Ennio Morricone interview on our behalf to be a renowned print and radio journalist."

"In the past, we have had no reason to doubt his journalistic integrity and skills," the magazine's editor-in-chief, Florian Boitin, said in a statement.

"Based on the information now at our disposal, we must unfortunately assume that the words spoken in the interview have, in part, been reproduced incorrectly," Boitin said without elaborating.

"We would like to express our regret should Mr. Morricone have been portrayed in a false light," he added. "We are working to clarify this matter and are exploring legal measures."

  • Monday, Nov. 12, 2018
MTV acquires SnowGlobe Music Festival
In this May 20, 2018, file photo, Diplo arrives at the Billboard Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. MTV is expanding its live events business in the U.S. by acquiring the SnowGlobe Music Festival.This year’s lineup includes Above & Beyond, Diplo, Eric Prydz, Rezz and RL Grime headlining among more than 40 artists. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

MTV is expanding its live events business in the U.S. by acquiring the SnowGlobe Music Festival.

The three-day New Year's Eve festival takes place in South Lake Tahoe, California. This year's lineup includes Above & Beyond, Diplo, Eric Prydz, Rezz and RL Grime headlining among more than 40 artists. SnowGlobe will also showcase extreme winter sports demonstrations.

Terms were not disclosed in Monday's announcement. MTV says it's taking the next step in "its resurgence by expanding deeper into live events."

MTV plans to reinvent its New Year's Eve coverage, connecting SnowGlobe with MTV's Times Square studio in New York. The cable network also plans to expand SnowGlobe to additional dates and locations worldwide and leverage its team to launch other new events.

MTV launched MTV Studios in June.

  • Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018
Francis Lai, Oscar-winning "Love Story" composer, dies at 86
This photo dated June 8, 2016 shows French composer Francis Lai at the opening of the Champs Elysees Film Festival in Paris, France. France's Culture Ministry said Wednesday Nov. 7, 2018 French composer Francis Lai who won an Oscar for his iconic movie score in "Love Story," has died. He was 86. (AP Photo)
PARIS (AP) -- 

French composer Francis Lai, who won an Oscar for the iconic "Love Story" soundtrack, has died, France's Culture Ministry said Thursday. He was 86.

Nice Mayor Christian Estrosi, who led nationwide tributes to Lai, who died on Wednesday, said he hopes to name "an emblematic place of our city" after the self-taught music legend who was born in the city in 1932.

Lai started as an accordionist, but quickly rose through the ranks as a composer, writing songs for singers including Edith Piaf and Yves Montand.

It was after his meeting with French New Wave director Claude Lelouch in the 1960s that Lai turned to the silver screen and produced his most famous work.

"He was the man of my life, an angel disguised as an accordionist," Lelouch said in interview with RTL radio.

"We made 35 films together and we had a love story that lasted 50 years," he added. 

Lai wrote "A Man and a Woman" for 1966's Academy Award-winning movie of the same name. It featured the well-known musical jingle "dabadabada."

Lai's success culminated with his 1970 Academy Award for the score of "Love Story ," one of the most enduring romantic movies of all time. Its main song "Where Do I Begin?" boasts household recognition even among those unfamiliar with the movie, thanks to popular vocal renditions by Andy Williams and Shirley Bassey.

  • Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2018
AMP Awards to return after a year hiatus; date, venue set for 2019
The gang from Antfood was in a celebratory mood when it won two 2017 AMP Awards for its work for HP.
NEW YORK -- 

The AMP Awards are back, with a promise to be bigger, badder and louder than ever. The annual competition honoring excellence in music and sound for brands, sponsored by the Association of Music Producers, is returning in 2019 after a one-year absence. News of the return of the AMP Awards was made by Elad Marish, president of AMP’s National Board and partner/sr. producer at Swell Music + Sound in San Francisco. The date for the show has been set--Tuesday, May 21, 2019.

An official AMP Awards call for entries, which signals the opening of the online entry portal, will be announced in the coming weeks, as will more news and details about the competition, including naming of the AMP Awards Show chair for 2019.

The 2018 show was cancelled when the AMP Awards venue, the Diamond Horseshoe just off Times Square in Manhattan, abruptly closed its doors a few months before the event date. The AMP Awards committee, after careful deliberation, determined that the feasibility of finding and securing a suitable location on short notice--on top of the volunteer efforts required to organize the entry process, the judging process and the event itself--was impractical. The show was tabled for the year and plans were put in motion to find a new event space the AMP Awards could call home.

For those attending the 2019 AMP Awards, the “new” venue will look familiar: it’s the Diamond Horseshoe, site of the sold-out 2017 AMP Awards, reborn as Sony Hall. Now owned and operated by Blue Note Entertainment Group and sponsored by Sony Corporation, Sony Hall comes equipped with state of the art Sony technologies integrated throughout the venue to deliver an enhanced entertainment experience.

“We’re thrilled to be back with the 2019 AMP Awards and delighted that our highly successful venue for 2017 has returned with new owners, new backing and the very best in sound and picture technology,” said Marish. “It’s going to be a great showcase for the winning work and an even better environment for our attendees to sample some exciting new music. Live entertainment from up and coming artists is a unique part of the AMP Awards experience. It’s why we’ve referred to the AMP Awards as the loudest show in the industry.”

In addition to presenting its signature awards, AMP will induct another iconic brand into its AMP Hall of Fame at event. In 2017 Mars, Inc., was honored for Outstanding Achievement in the Use of Music to Define the Brand. The Hall of Fame designation has been presented to marketers whose use of music and sound has been fundamental to building strong consumer perceptions. Past inductees include Volkswagen, Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Budweiser, Nike, Chevrolet and Pepsi.

The AMP Awards is the only juried advertising contest to focus on the unique contributions made to the industry by creators and producers of music and sound. Judged by agency, label, publishing and music production professionals, the awards will present trophies in 11 unique categories as well as a Best In Show honor chosen by its Curatorial Committee. 

  • Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2018
Missy Elliott, Chrissie Hynde up for Songwriters Hall of Fame
In this July 7, 2018 file photo, Missy Elliott performs at the 2018 Essence Festival in New Orleans. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

Missy Elliott — one of rap's greatest voices — has been nominated for the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The Songwriters Hall gave The Associated Press the list of nominees Wednesday, a day ahead of its official announcement.

Other performing nominees are Mariah Carey, Chrissie Hynde, Vince Gill, Mike Love, Jimmy Cliff, Jeff Lynne, Cat Stevens, John Prine, Lloyd Price, Tommy James and the Eurythmics (Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart).

Non-performing nominees are Jack Tempchin, Dean Dillon, Jerry Fuller, Tom T. Hall, Roger Nichols and Dallas Austin.

Nominated non-performing songwriting duos include P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri, Russell Brown and Irwin Levine, Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty, Dean Pitchford and Michael Gore, Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham, Bobby Hart and Tommy Boyce.

  • Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018
Camila Cabello wins best artist and best song at MTV EMAs
Singer Camila Cabello accepts the Best Artist award during the European MTV Awards in Bilbao, Spain, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2018. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)
BILBAO, Spain (AP) -- 

Cuban-American singer Camila Cabello was the big winner at the MTV EMAs gala in Spain on Sunday, while Janet Jackson used her acceptance speech for a life-time achievement award to take a stand for women's rights.

Jackson was honored with the Global Icon Award for her four-decade, 11-album career that started when she was a child growing up in the family that also produced her music legend brother, Michael, and The Jackson Five.

The 52-year-old Jackson showed she still has her dance moves while performing a medley of "Made for Now," ''All for You" and "Rhythm Nation" while accompanied by African drummers and torchbearers. She later said her award came with a responsibility.

"Tonight I feel moved to speak for those women whose voices have been stifled," she said. "I am one of those voices, women who have been gagged, literally and emotionally, women who have been abused, women who have been intimidated, women who have lived in fear, I stand with you.

"Tonight I carry the hope that a new world is emerging. Women, our voices will be heard!"

Other than Jackson's call for gender equality, the show was all about the dazzle provided by the costumes, choreography and the elaborate light and video displays on the huge circular stage.

With pop star Ariana Grande shut out despite her five nominations, Cabello was the undisputed star of the night.

The 21-year-old Cabello beat out Grande, Drake, Dua Lipa and Post Malone for best artist, while her sultry hit "Havana" took the trophy for best song and best video. She also topped the category for best act.

Last year, Cabello won the award for best pop artist at the edition held in London. Born in Havana before her family left for Miami, Cabello was discovered on the U.S. version of X-Factor and formed a part of the group Fifth Harmony.

The 25th edition of the awards, formerly known as the as the MTV Europe Music Awards, was as usual loaded with eye-catching performances, as well as references to Bilbao's links to the art world, first and foremost thanks to the city's Guggenheim Museum.

Host Hailee Steinfeld opened the show with a video sketch featuring her breaking into an art gallery to "steal" one of the MTV trophies, only to then emerge on stage in a tiny silver dress. Several costume changes later, she became a "work of art," in her words, when she donned a long white dress and was sprayed with blue and yellow paint.

After Nicki Minaj and Little Mix got the music going, the singer of Panic! At The Disco made an action-movie entry. Frontman Brendon Urie was depicted in a video as climbing down the façade of the Bilbao Exhibition Centre before he was lowed from the hall's ceiling while singing the opening of "High Hopes."

When his group won the best alternative award, Urie announced "this is going in my bathroom."

Minaj won for best hip-hop artist and best look. 5 Seconds of Summer left with the best rock award, Marshmello was voted best electronic artist, and best new artist went to Cardi B.

Shawn Mendes won for best live performer, and British singer-songwriter Dua Lipa was best pop artist.

The spectators went wild singing along to "Malamente" by Spanish sensation Rosalia, but the most moving performance belonged to Halsey. She delivered her heart-torn "Without Me" while chained inside a large transparent cube. When the cube lifted, water poured down on her like rain.

Boy duo Jack & Jack lifted spirits singing "Rise" while being hoisted aloft on wires, spinning and twisting over a stage that depicted a whirlpool until a friendly bunch of fans rushed in to cushion their landing.

On Saturday night, Muse kicked off the weekend's festivities with guitar-driven rock concert at San Mames Stadium, home to local soccer club Athletic Bilbao.

The MTV EMAs is held in a different European city each year, with winners selected by fans across the continent.

  • Friday, Nov. 2, 2018
Recording Academy to honor Willie Nelson
In this Jan. 7, 2017, file photo, Willie Nelson performs in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

The Recording Academy's Producers & Engineers Wing will honor Willie Nelson days before the 2019 Grammy Awards.

The academy announced Tuesday that Nelson's career and achievements will be celebrated on Feb. 6, 2019, at The Village Studios in Los Angeles.

Neil Portnow, the academy's president and CEO, says in a statement that "Willie Nelson has inspired generations of musicians and fans, and continues to set precedents of excellence within the music community."

Past honorees include Quincy Jones, T Bone Burnett, Alicia Keys and Neil Young.

The annual event also highlights producers and engineers in the music industry. More than 6,400 members make up the academy's Producers & Engineers Wing.

Nelson has won eight Grammys throughout this career. The 61st annual Grammy Awards will air live Feb. 10 on CBS.

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